North Korea claims U.S. is taking too much credit for peace talks

North Korea warned Washington's victory lap could undo the historic meeting between Kim (r.) and Moon last month. (AP)

North Korea claims President Trump played no part in its recent decision to open peace talks with longtime enemies.

Instead, Pyongyang asserted Sunday that the Trump administration was "misleading" the public by insisting it compelled North Korea to the negotiating table.

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The bold statement comes weeks before North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un is set to have a historic sit down with the President.

The White House and some Republican lawmakers have argued it was Trump's brazen threats against North Korea, as well as rounds of sanctions, that brought the isolated country to the talks. But the hermetic nation argued the victory lap was unmerited — and killing the mood.

"The U.S. is deliberately provoking the DPRK at the time when the situation on the Korean Peninsula is moving toward peace and reconciliation," said a Foreign Ministry spokesman, referring to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, in remarks carried by state-run media.

The White House is making a "dangerous attempt," the spokesman continued, to undo Kim's meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae In — during which the longtime enemies announced a framework for peace after a six-decade standoff.

Trump launched into a war of words last year with North Korea, which the hermetic nation now claims didn't play a factor. (Mike Theiler/REUTERS)

Kim and Moon walked away from the late April summit without many details on what North Korea would require to get rid of its nuclear weapons.